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A Couple Drew From Their IRA to Bridge the Gap to Medicare. Those Withdrawals Set a Higher Medicare Premium Two Years Later.
Key takeaways
- A Couple Drew From Their IRA to Bridge the Gap to Medicare.
- IRMAA works as a cliff rather than a slope, meaning that crossing $218,000 joint MAGI jumps each spouse's monthly Part B premium from $203 to $284.
- Drawing bridge-year income from Roth accounts, HSAs, or taxable brokerage basis instead of a traditional IRA keeps MAGI lower without cutting spending.
A Couple Drew From Their IRA to Bridge the Gap to Medicare. Those Withdrawals Set a Higher Medicare Premium Two Years Later. Gerelyn Terzo Mon, June 29, 2026 at 1:02 AM GMT+7 5 min read Quick Read Medicare prices Part B premiums using MAGI from two years prior, so large IRA withdrawals at 64 directly set premiums at 66.
IRMAA works as a cliff rather than a slope, meaning that crossing $218,000 joint MAGI jumps each spouse's monthly Part B premium from $203 to $284.
Drawing bridge-year income from Roth accounts, HSAs, or taxable brokerage basis instead of a traditional IRA keeps MAGI lower without cutting spending.
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